The Role of Mast Cells in Healing Purulent Wounds Using a Drug from the Polyhexamethylene Guanidine Group with the Antiseptic Polyhexanide: An Ultrastructural Study
Irina Chekmareva, Atim Emaimo John, Andrey Kostin, Alexander Alekhnovich, Artem Volodkin, Ilya Klabukov, Denis Baranovskii, Viktoria Shishkina, Igor Buchwalow, Markus Tiemann, Dmitrii Atiakshin

TL;DR
This study explores how mast cells help heal infected wounds and how a specific antiseptic drug affects this process.
Contribution
The study reveals the ultrastructural changes in mast cells during wound healing and the effect of polyhexanide on accelerating recovery.
Findings
Mast cells show phase-specific degranulation during wound healing.
Polyhexanide 0.1% speeds up the transition from inflammation to tissue repair.
Treatment with polyhexanide promotes early activation of reparative processes in wound tissue.
Abstract
Wound healing is a delicately regulated pathophysiological process based on molecular, cellular, and tissue interactions. Mast cells (MCs) are involved in the reparative process in all phases of wound healing, which indicates their general significance in reparative processes. The structural and functional changes in the MCs during the healing process correspond to the phase of the wound process and determine its course. In the inflammatory phase, rapid whole-granular degranulation of MCs with the secretion of biologically active proinflammatory substances that have a stimulating effect on inflammatory cells prevailed. In the proliferation phase, the maximum number of MCs per unit area of wound tissue and the maximum degranulation index were noted. In the phase of granulated tissue remodeling, the amount and functional activity of MCs sharply decrease, which contributes to the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsWound Healing and Treatments · Mast cells and histamine · Antimicrobial agents and applications
